'AMES eAsH 'PENNEY AND HIS fiORTH 'DAKOTASTORES by DavidDelbert Kruger "WhatFifth Avenue wears today, will be rushed . ..to Hettinger tomorrow." C.W. Samsel, manager, Hettinger J.C. Penney store, 1927 James Cash Penney, the son of a poor Missouri farmer, was the founderof the national department store chain that still bears his name. By 1930 he had successfully established his stores in thirty-four North Dakota towns, more than any other retailer before or since. Photographs courtesy of the DeGolyerLibrary, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, unless otherwise indicated. 2 North Dakota History Display at the 1961 grand opening of the new J.C. Penney store in Williston, North Dakota. of them communities with fewer than 1,000 residents, Although James Cash Penney opened his first store would be graced with a J. C. Penney mercantile, giving in 1902, at the age of twenty-six, he kept his business virtually every North Dakotan from town or country entirely in the western United States for the first twelve easy access to a national department store. Nearly all of years of its existence. By 1914 he was operating about James Cash Penney's North Dakota stores would remain forty stores out of his Utah headquarters, but had no a vital part of their communities well into the latter half locations east of Montana, Wyoming, or Colorado. Not of the twentieth century. a single J. C. Penney store existed in the Midwest, and, From today's perspective it seems logical that a city unlike Montgomery Ward and Sears Roebuck, his chain like Fargo would have been high on Penney's list for a had no catalog business to cover the agrarian region new store location. By 1914 Fargo and Grand Forks 1 by mail order. However, Penney was well aware of were clearly the two largest cities in the state. However, North Dakota's booming rural population, and he was selecting North Dakota's largest towns for a J. C. Penney eager to locate his stores in North Dakota's emerging store was an aberration for Penney and his company. communities. In April 1914 Penney expanded his With a population of roughly 14,000, Fargo was, chain eastward opening new stores in Fargo, Wahpeton, at the time, the largest city in the nation to have a and Grand Forks. Not only were these three locations J.C. Penney store.2 Salt Lake City, despite being home the first J. C. Penney stores in North Dakota, they were to the first J. C. Penney headquarters, did not have also the first J. C. Penney stores in the entire Midwest. a store; neither did Seattle, Portland, Denver, Boise, Penney would use them as commercial seeds for what Billings, or Cheyenne, the most populous cities in states would become a very visible retail presence throughout where Penney operated. It was no accident that North Dakota and the region. Within sixteen years the J. C. Penney stores tended to be in small towns. Penney main streets of thirty-four North Dakota towns, many himself was a country boy at heart, and his philosophy of Volume 77, Numbers 3 & 4 3 doing business emanated from his rural roots: career and the drier climates of the West.5 Penney lefr Missouri initially for Denver before settling in Wyoming For me, innately, cities were places to keep away and ultimately Utah. However, even though Penney from. Small towns were where I was at home. I embraced retailing as a profession, he remained attached knew how to get close to the lives of small town to agriculture and the small-town, agrarian way of life. people, learning their needs3 and preferences and Just afrer opening his North Dakota stores, he moved serving them accordingly. the company headquarters from Salt Lake City, Utah, to New York City. However, Penney continued to be most A good example at the time was Wahpeton, with a comfortable in small towns and rural areas that were population of just over 2,400, much more typical of the largely dependent upon agriculture. Penney felt that 4 North Dakota locations Penney was seeking. From farmers and ranchersJ. were people he could always relate 1900 to 1910, nearly 260,000 people had moved into to and that his C. Penney stores existed largely to serve the state, the majority of them coming not to inhabit them. Even a successful career in retailing did not stop cities but to homestead and settle the vast lands that him from eventually returning to ranching and farming were still available in the region. North Dakota was in New York, Florida, and Missouri. attractive to the Penney company because of these The firststores Penney"J. opened in North Dakota were emerging agricultural populations throughout the not initially identified as C. Penney" locations. They state's geography, in and around towns that had barely were called "Golden Rule" mercantiles, and that name been established by railroads and twentieth-century was utilized for the official storefront signage. Similarly, homesteaders. the stores James Cash Penney had opened in western J.C. Penney, the Golden Rule, and states also first operated under the Golden Rule name. 'Mother Stores' Penney and his first two partners, Thomas Callahan and William "Guy" Johnson, had all been part of the ames Cash Penney never lived in North Dakota, Golden Rule retail syndicate, a loose-knit chain of buyers Jbut he identified with its emerging agrarian culture. and stores that kept prices low by maximizing volume Growing up a poor farm boy near Hamilton, Missouri, purchasing and emphasizing quality merchandise and Penney had raised and sold livestock since the age of cash-only sales. Callahan had firstemployed Penney as a eight, when his impoverished father had required him to clerk at his own Golden Rule mercantile in Colorado in buy his own clothing. To generate income, he naturally 1898 and was so impressed with Penney's ambition and took an interest in agriculture and a subsequent interest work ethic that he began grooming him for management6 in retail, to maximize the purchasing power of what at a Wyoming store he jointly owned with Johnson. little money he could make. As a teenager, he began Within two years, Johnson and Callahan had also put farming and moonlighted at a local clothing store before up two-thirds of the capital investment needed to open health concerns forced him entirely into a retailing Penney's firstGolden Rule mercantile in Kemmerer, Wyoming, as well as giving him ownership in two other stores. In time, Penney was able to buy out his partners completely and offer similar Golden Rule store partnerships to his own associates, allowing the retail chain to grow without acquiring debt. Growth was naturally slow for the first five years, with only three outlets in Wyoming and one in Idaho. However, by 1912, a mere ten years after opening his firststore, Penney had already developed a chain of thirty-four Golden Rule stores operating predominantly in the west and northwesr.7 One year before venturing into Penney opened the Fargo store and the Wahpeton store on the same North Dakota, Penney made the decision to day in 1914, his first retail ventures into North Dakota. This Fargo break away from the Golden Rule franchise, J. C. Penney store went through a number of remodels and expansions to better control8 all aspects of his retail until moving to West Acres Shopping Center in 1979. operation. Penney personally struggled with 4 North Dakota History the idea of changing the name of his stores, as he strongly believed in what the Golden Rule stood for, as a merchandising company and as a philosophy for living. "To me," remarked Penney, "the sign on the store was much more than a trade name."9 Ironically, despite Penney's initial resistance, his senior partners voted to use his abbreviated name as the ultimate name for the stores.10 Almost immediately, yellowJ. and black signs proclaiming "THE C. PENNEY COMPANY" began appearing above new store entrances.11 The Fargo, Grand Forks, and"J. Wahpeton locations officially became The early Jamestown store, photographed here in 1928, operated in the C. Penney" stores within months of White Building until 1961, when it moved to a modernnew building at st their openings, and all subsequent locations 219 1 Avenue. It would remain in that location fornine teen years, until "J. moving to the BuffaloMall in 1980. opened with C. Penney" signage across the storefronts. Golden Rule mercantiles, however, continued to open across North Dakota under his family he moves to the city and becomes a other proprietors, many of whom had been personally permanent resident. He takes a keen interest in its acquainted with Penney for several years. affairs because it is to be his and his family's home, J.N. McCracken opened a Golden Rule store in and it is but natural that he should do his part in Bismarck, while Frank S. Jones opened Golden Rule helping it grow and prosper.15 stores in Beach, Bowman, Hettinger, and Linton.12 Even though Penney could now rightfully compete with other It was important to Penney that all managers were Golden Rule locations, he generally refrained; out of good "fits" for their respective communities. Penney propriety, from opening J. C. Penney stores in towns was personally involved in selecting them, and in many where they operated, particularly if he knew and liked cases, his first managers remained in those stores and the people who operated them.13 Despite the change in communities until their retirement. Ultimately, several name, the Golden Rule philosophy remained a critical managers in North Dakota spent more than twenty years component of the Penney corporate culture and service model that is still utilized today.
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